FAKE! The
“totem poles” outside the drum tower in the Dong ethnic minority village of Ma’an
are covered with moulded foam rubber painted to look like carved wood! Such a
disappointment.

We
travelled to Ma’an to view the Chengyang Wind and Rain Bridge built by Dong carpenters;
the Dong are one of 56 ethnic minority groups in China. “A Wind and Rain bridge
is normally composed of the bridge, a tower and a pavilion, with wood being the
main building material ... A specialty of these bridges is that no nails [are]
used in their construction. Rather, the genius Dong carpenters use groove
joints in structural members of the bridge to hold them together and transmit the
load to the pier ... The most famous of these bridges is Chengyang Bridge ...
It was built in 1916, and is one of the best and the largest wind and rain
bridges in China. The bridge has two platforms (one at each end of the bridge),
3 piers, 3 spans, 5 pavilions, 19 verandas, and three floors. The bridge is
64.4 meters long, 3.4 meters wide and 10.6 meters high” (amusingplanet.com).

Dong drum
towers are designed to resemble a cedar tree. “The Dong drum towers are built
without any nails. The entire structure is dove-tailed and supported by sixteen
wooden beams or pillars. The four central pillars are called the “Golden
Pillars” and represent the four seasons, while the twelve others represent the
twelve months of the year” (travelcathay.com). A quick internet search has not
revealed any discussion about Dong “totem poles”, so we have no idea whether Ma’an’s
fake poles are fake in more ways than one.

From Ma’an
we travelled back to Sanjiang then via Longsheng to the Dragon’s Backbone rice
terraces. A cable car carried us up and over the extraordinary terraces. LOVE
the name of our hotel.